EVGA has decided to showcase both its custom GTX 1080 as well as a few custom GTX 1070 graphics cards at Computex 2016 show, hinting that both lineups could be similar.

Spotted by Tweaktown.com, EVGA decided to bring the Geforce GTX 1070 SuperClocked to Computex 2016 show and this one features the same ACX 3.0 cooler as the GTX 1080 version. It will probably use the same PCB and it certainly uses the same ACX 3.0 cooler.

We suspect that the entire lineup of GTX 1070 graphics cards from EVGA could be similar to the GTX 1080 lineup, including SuperClocked, FTW and Classified graphics cards as well as future Hybrid and Hydro versions.

Unfortuantely, EVGA only lists the GTX 1070 Founders Edition so we have no idea on when these custom GTX 1070 graphics cards will be available.

Following Nvidia's official retail launch of the new Geforce GTX 1080, EVGA has prepared no less than five different graphics card, with more to come soon.

In addition to the standard GTX 1080 Founders Edition, which is completely stock and the GTX 1080 ACX 3.0, which is based on both reference PCB and reference clocks but features EVGA's new ACX 3.0 cooler, EVGA has also unveiled three factory-overclocked and custom graphics cards, the EVGA GTX 1080 SC Gaming ACX 3.0, GTX 1080 FTW Gaming ACX 3.0 and the GTX 1080 Classified Gaming ACX 3.0 graphics cards.

The biggest update in the lineup is the new EVGA ACX 3.0 cooler, which further upgrades the already impressive ACX 2.0 cooler by increased heatpipe and copper contact area with STraight Heat Pipe 3.0, which in terms made it 10 percent cooler as well as a new optimal tuned heatsink and fin design, which made it 13 percent quieter, compared to the ACX 2.0 cooler.

The new EVGA ACX 3.0 cooler still comes with memory/MOSFET cooling plate, dB Inverter and two Double Ball Bearing fans but now also comes with RGB LEDs placed in the shroud and fully controllable via EVGA's PrecisionX OC software, at least on some models. All Geforce GTX 1080 models come with a backplate.

In case you missed it before, the GTX 1080 Founders Edition works at 1,607MHz base and 1,733MHz GPU Boost clocks while 8GB of GDDR5X memory is clocked at 2,500MHz (10,000MHz effective). The EVGA GTX 1080 ACX 3.0 is the same and only replaces the stock blower fan with the new EVGA ACX 3.0 cooler. IT does not feature RGB LEDs but only white ones, same as the reference one.

The EVGA GTX 1080 SC (SuperClocked) Gaming ACX 3.0 is the next in line and it is pretty much an overclocked stock graphics card as it works at 1,708MHz GPU base and 1,847MHz GPU Boost clocks while memory remained at reference 10,000MHz. It does come with EVGA's ACX 3.0 cooler but does not feature RGB LEDs and still needs a single 8-pin PCIe power connector.

The EVGA GTX 1080 FTW (For The Win) Gaming ACX 3.0 graphics card is a completely different beast as it comes with a custom PCB with 10-phase VRM, adjustable RGB LEDs, and EVGA Double BIOS. It needs two 8-pin PCI-Express power connectors but, unfortunately, EVGA still did not finalize the clocks.

The EVGA GTX 1080 Classified is pretty much the same but it comes with a triple BIOS, beefier 14-phase VRM, which should provide further overclocking potential and make it one of the best GTX 1080 on the market, at least until EVGA makes the Kingpin Edition.

Unfortunately, only the EVGA Geforce GTX 1080 Founders Edition is currently available for US $699.99 on both EVGA's official site and some retail/e-tail shops but ACX 3.0 equipped cards should come soon as well.

EVGA has announced its latest addition to the Geforce GTX 980 Ti lineup, the new EVGA Geforce GTX 980 Ti Classified ACX 2.0+.

The new GTX 980 Ti Classified ACX 2.0+ should be based on the same design as the earlier unveiled GTX 980 Ti Classified Kingpin Edition as it features the same "taller custom PCB", 14+3-phase VRM powered by two 8-pin PCI-Express power connectors and EVGA's ACX 2.0+ dual-fan cooler with backplate.

In case you missed it earlier, the GTX 980 Ti is based on Nvidia's GM200 GPU with 2816 CUDA cores and EVGA decided to factory-overclock its new GTX 980 Ti Classified ACX 2.0+ to 1190MHz for the GPU base and 1291MHz for the GPU Boost clocks. It also comes with 6GB of GDDR5 memory clocked at reference 7010MHz and paired up with a 384-bit memory interface.

The EVGA GTX 980 Ti Classified ACX 2.0+ also features support for EVGA EVBot and has dual BIOS support. It currently sits below the EVGA GTX 980 Ti Hybrid and the Hydro Copper versions of the GTX 980 Ti graphics card.

In case you missed it earlier, the new ACX 2.0+ cooler should provide up to 20 percent cooler GPU, up to 15 percent cooler memory and up to 13 percent cooler MOSFETs, while even providing lower noise, thanks to triple 8mm heatpipes and two double ball bearing fans.

In addition to the new EVGA Geforce GTX 980 Ti Classified Kingpin Edition graphics card, EVGA has also displayed its upcoming Intel Z170 Express chipset based motherboards for Intel 6th generation Skylake CPUs at Computex 2015 show in Taipei.

Pictured by EVGA's Jacob Freeman and posted at Twitter, all three EVGA socket LGA1151 motherboards are based on Intel's Z170 Express chipset and pack plenty of high-end features. The pictured lineup starts with EVGA Z170 Classified, the flagship offer which is aimed mostly at overclockers since it packs a 10-phase VRM powered by dual 8-pin EPS power connectors. It also features four DDR4 memory slots with support for up to 64GB of DDR4 3400MHz memory, five PCI-Express 3.0 x16 slots and single PCI-Express 3.0 x4 slot, single M.2 slot, eight SATA 6Gbps ports and two SATA Express ports as well as dual Gigabit Ethernet and plenty of USB 3.0 ports.

The next in line is the EVGA Z170 FTW, which is mostly aimed at those looking for a high-end motherboard but without an extra overclocking features as this one will be powered by single 8-pin EPS power connector and most likely feature an 8-phase VRM. It also comes with four DDR4 memory slots, four PCI-Express 3.0 x16 slots, single PCI-Express 3.0 x4 slot, single M.2 slot, six SATA 6Gbps ports and lacks SATA Express ports, at least as far as we can see on the picture.

The last but not the least is the mini-ITX EVGA Z170 Stinger, which will appeal to those building a high-end SFF gaming rig. It comes with slightly toned down 6-phase VRM powred by a single 8-pin EPS power connector, only two memory slots, supporting up to 32GB of DDR4 memory, single PCI-Express 3.0 x16 slot, four SATA 6Gbps ports but also retains some extra features like on-board buttons.

All three motherboard feature the same stealthy black/silver color scheme. Unfortunately, EVGA did not talk about the price or the actual availability date but we guess we will hear a lot more about them as soon as Intel officially launched its 6th generation Core Skylake desktop CPUs.

EVGA certainly had a lot to show at Computex 2015 in Taipei, and one of the crown jewels was definitely the new EVGA GTX 980 Ti Classified Kingpin Edition graphics card.

Pictured at Computex 2015 by Techpowerup.com and completely based on a custom design and a larger than reference PCB, the new EVGA GTX 980 Ti Classified Kingpin Edition comes with a 15-phase VRM and a new cooler which uses a full copper heatsink connected to the base via 8mm heatpipes and cooled by two 100mm fans. The new graphics card also comes with a full cover backplate.

The VRM needs two 8-pin and one 6-pin PCI-Express power connectors and with such specifications we are quite sure that the factory-overclock will be quite impressive as well, making it one of the fastest Geforce GTX 980 Ti on the market.

Unfortunately, EVGA still did not finalize the precise clocks for the new EVGA GTX 980 Ti Classified Kingpin Edition, but we are sure that we will both see and hear more about it pretty soon.

EVGA has unveiled its latest Geforce GTX 900 series graphics card, the EVGA GTX 980 Hybrid, which comes with an all-in-one liquid and air cooler.

While this approach to cooling is not new and has been seen on the Radeon R9 295X2 graphics card, as well as some other graphics cards, it is the first GTX 980 graphics card with such system. The liquid cooling part of it takes care of the GPU, while the blower-style air cooler takes care of the memory and VRM part of the graphics card.

With such cooling system that promises up to 25°C lower temperatures compared to the reference cooled GTX 980, it's no surprise that EVGA decided to include a hefty factory-overclock on the new GTX 980 Hybrid. The GPU works at 1291MHz base and 1393MHz GPU Boost clocks which are the same clocks seen on the EVGA GTX 980 Classified graphics card. The 4GB of GDDR5 memory paired up with a 256-bit memory interface ended up at reference 7010MHz. Of course, there will most likely be plenty of additional overclocking headroom left.

In case you missed it earlier, the GTX 980 is based on Nvidia's GM204 Maxwell GPU with 2048 CUDA cores and packs 4GB of GDDR5 memory paired up with a 256-bit memory interface.

EVGA was quite keen to announce that its hardware, thanks to the impressive overclocking skills of K|NGP|N, is currently holding no less than six 3DMark World Records, including the recently released Fire Strike "Ultra" preset.

In the capable hands of one of the top overclockers around, Vince "K|NGP|N" Lucido, EVGA's X99 motherboards, EVGA GTX 980 Classified graphics cards and EVGA SuperNOVA PSUs, are currently in the top when it comes to overclocking and 3DMark benchmark.

Vince "K|NGP|N" Lucido currently holds six world records including 3DMark Fire Strike score of 19,811, 3DMark Fire Strike Extreme score of 9,617 and 3DMark Fire Strike Ultra score of 5,007, all on a single-card as well as 3DMark Fire Strike score of 40,338, 3DMark Fire Strike Extreme score of 28,059 and 3DMark Fire Strike Ultra score of 16,243, all on 4-way SLI system.

Following the official announcement of the new GM204 Maxwell based Geforce GTX 980 and the Geforce GTX 970 graphics cards, EVGA has unveiled a total of 15 different versions of these graphics cards, with old ACX or the new ACX 2.0 cooler and various clock settings.

With the launch of the new Geforce GTX 980 and GTX 970 graphics cards, EVGA decided to introduce the new version of its well known ACX cooler, the ACX 2.0. According to EVGA, most manufacturers only focus on one aspect when designing a new cooler, hence they neglect other aspects of fan and heatsink design , something that EVGA wanted to change with their new ACX 2.0 cooler.

According to EVGA, the power consumption of a fan can affect the overclocking ability of the entire graphics cards due to maximum power ceiling that also takes the fan power consumption into account, thus EVGA completely redesigned the motor to reduce noise, increased the fan blade count to create higher pressure, all without needing to increase the motor speed and noise levels, something that makes it the best complete cooling solution on the market.

The fans on the new ACX 2.0 cooler now features eleven fan blades and feature Swept Fan Design that should reduce fan noise levels while the motor has improved magnets that allow 150RPM increase, 3phase/6slot design that improves efficiency and increased silicon steel which give more strength to magnets. According to EVGA, all of this was enough to get up to 36 percent quieter graphics card with 26 lower GPU temperature as well as 250 percent lower fan power consumption and 400 percent longer lifespan.

As far as the EVGA GTX 980 and GTX 970 lineup is concerned, EVGA has announced a total of 15 different models, some with older ACX, some with the new ACX 2.0 cooler as well as the famous GTX 980 Hydro Copper version that comes with a full cover EK Water Blocks water block.

EVGA's lineup starts with a total of eight different Geforce GTX 980 graphics cards, including the reference designed GTX 980, clocked at 1126/1216MHz for base/Boost GPU clocks and 4GB of GDDR5 memory clocked at reference 7010MHz, as well as a Superclocked version of the reference GTX 980 working at 1241/1342MHz and 7010MHz for the memory.

Next in line are four EVGA GTX 980 graphics cards that will feature the new ACX 2.0 cooler, including the EVGA Geforce GTX 980 ACX 2.0, Superclocked ACX 2.0, FTW ACX 2.0 and the Geforce GTX 980 Classified ACX 2.0.

The clocks range from reference on the plain GTX 980 ACX 2.0 up to 1291/1405MHz for GPU base/Boost clocks on the EVGA GTX 980 Classified ACX 2.0 graphics card. EVGA has decided to leave the 4GB of GDDR5 memory, paired up with a 256-bit memory interface, on reference 7010MHz clock on all versions.

Unfortunately, the EVGA GTX 980 Hydro Copper is yet to be details and we are surely looking forward to see how far will EVGA be able to push that factory-overclock on the GTX 980.

The Geforce GTX 970 lineup is quite similar and starts with three rather plain Geforce GTX 970 graphics cards, the EVGA GTX 970 with older EVGA blower style fan and reference 1050MHz base and 1178MHz GPU Boost clocks and the EVGA GTX 970 Superclocked with the same fan but higher 1140/1279MHz GPU clocks. It continues with the EVGA GTX 970 ACX, which has reference clocks and older ACX cooler, the EVGA GTX 970 Superclocked ACX, with old ACX cooler and 1165/1317MHz GPU clocks as well as the non-overclocked EVGA GTX 970 ACX 2.0 with the new ACX cooler.

The Superclocked version works at the same 1165/1317MHz GPU base and Boost clocks, the SSC ACX 2.0 works at 1190/1342MHz for GPU base and GPU Boost clocks, while the EVGA GTX 970 FTW ACX 2.0 works at 1216MHz base and 1367MHz GPU Boost clocks.

Some versions of the EVGA GTX 980 and GTX 970 graphics cards, including Classified, FTW and SSC versions, come with certain extra features like the Triple or Double BIOS and 1.215v+ voltage boost (on GTX 970). Some of these GTX 980 and GTX 970 graphics cards should be already available directly from EVGA while other, should be available in a couple of weeks.

EVGA will also offer a free five warranty for the Geforce GTX 980 and GTX 970 graphics cards as well as a limited deal of free backplate with select Geforce GTX 970 graphics cards purchased before October 20th.

You can check out EVGA's full Geforce GTX 980 and GTX 970 lineup over at EVGA's website.

After Intel has officially lifted the NDA veil off its Haswell-E HEDT platform, EVGA has officially unveiled full details regarding its Intel X99 Express chipset based motherboard lineup. EVGA's current X99 Express chipset based lineup include three models, the EVGA X99 Micro (E995), EVGA X99 FTW (E997) and the EVGA X99 Classified (E999). According to EVGA, the company is also working on a higher-end model which will most likely be ready for the next year.

During the Haswell-E launch day, EVGA has also launched a new BIOS version update which brings support for DDR3-2800 and DDR4-3000 on all three motherboards.

The most interesting in the lineup is most likely the m-ATX form-factor EVGA X99 Micro motherboard. This one is aimed at SFF gaming high-end systems and feature a 6-phase VRM which draws power from 24-pin ATX and 8-pin EPS power connectors.

As seen on couple of pictures teased by EVGA earlier, the EVGA X99 Micro features only four DIMM memory slots which gives it support for up to 64GB of DDR4 3000MHz+ memory. It also features a 7.1-channel Realtek ALC1150 audio chip, has single Gigabit Ethernet port, six SATA 6Gbps ports, an M.2 slot, three PCI-Express 3.0 x16 slots working in 1x16, 2x16 or 3x8 arrangement, five fan headers, six USB 3.0 and eight USB 2.0 ports as well as some features which are aimed at overclockers, including EZ Voltage read points, on-board CPU Temp monitor and on-board power, reset and clear CMOS buttons.

The next in line is the EVGA X99 FTW, an E-ATX form-factor motherboard, a motherboard more focused at gamers. Although it is pretty much based on the same design as the the current flagship EVGA X99 Classified motherboard, it lacks some features which are aimed at overclockers.

The EVGA X99 FTW features an 8-phase VRM design, has eight DIMM memory slots with support for up to 128GB of DDR4-3000+ memory, five PCI-Express 3.0 x16 slots set to work in 1x16, 2x16, 3x8 or 4x8 slot arrangement, has single PCI-Express x4 slot, seven fan headers, eight USB 2.0 and six USB 3.0 ports, a total of ten SATA 6Gbps ports (six with RAID support), two Intel Gigabit Ethernet ports, and the same 7.1-channel Realtek ALC1150 integrated audio.

The last in EVGA's Intel X99 Express chipset lineup is the current flagship and overclockers dream, the EVGA X99 Classfied E-ATX motherboard. In addition to aforementioned support for up to 128GB of DDR4 3000MHz+ memory in eight DIMM memory slots, the EVGA X99 Classified features a 10-phase CPU VRM drawing power from standard 24-pin ATX as well as two 8-pin EPS power connectors.

It also has higher gold content CPU socket, 8-layer PCB as well as five PCI-Express 3.0 x16 slots which work in 1x16, 2x16, 3x8 or 4x8 slot arrangement when paired up with 40 lane CPU. The rest of the features include a single PCI-Express x4 slot, six fan headers, 5.1-channel Creative Core 3D audio (CA0132), two Intel Gigabit Ethernet ports, a total of ten SATA 6Gbps ports and an M.2 slot.

The EVGA X99 Classified comes with a full set of EVGA's overclocking-friendly features like the triple-BIOS support, dual 8-pin CPU power which provides up to 600W of power, PCI-E disable switches, EZ Voltage read points, onboard CPU temp monitor, on board power, reset and clear CMOS buttons and more.

EVGA also released some details regarding the prices of its Intel X99 Express chipset based lineup. The X99 Micro will hit retail with US$249/€228, the EVGA X99 FTW will sell for US$299/€273 while the EVGA X99 Classified will be on retail shelves with US$399/€364 price tag.

EVGA has now officially teased one of its upcoming Intel X99 Express chipset based motherboards designed for Intel's new Haswell-E LGA2011-3 CPUs, the mATX EVGA X99 Micro.

Although leaked earlier, in some rather blurry pictures, together with some of the other EVGA X99-based motherboards, including the X99 Classified and the X99 FTW, we now have some clearer look at EVGA's mATX X99-based motherboard.

Based on a mATX form-factor, the new EVGA X99 Micro features the 10-phase VRM design, four DDR4 memory slots on each side of the LGA2011-3 socket with support for up to 64GB of DDR4 memory, on-board power and reset buttons, LED POST, six SATA 6Gbps ports, three PCI-Express 3.0 slots, bunch of USB 3.0 adn USB 2.0 ports, as well as a single mSATA slot placed between PCI-Express slots.

While it lacks some features seen on bigger ATX form-factor motherboards, like the new SATA-Express port, we are quite sure that this one will be quite popular for high-performance SFF rigs.

Earlier rumored price for the EVGA X99 Micro puts it at somewhere around US $250, which is not bad for a feature-packed mATX high-end motherboard, especially considering that the X99 Classified should retail at around US $400.